Shadowing-Übung: Ocean Vuong Shares with Oprah What She Meant to Him and His Mother - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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When you called me, this is Oprah.
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When you called me, this is Oprah.
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How are you?
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What?
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This is Oprah Winfrey.
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How are you?
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I recognized the voice right away.
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I just didn't believe that you were talking to me for any real reason.
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But when I heard your voice,
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I said, this is the voice I heard all my life at 4 o'clock when I answered the phone.
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And you know, I wanted to tell you this,
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that your voice was a kind of mediation for all of these women in the nail salon,
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both the workers and the people who went there to get their nails done.
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Because I saw them when they came in with their husbands
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and the husbands would wait for a while and then they would leave.
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And after a while, it would just be all women.
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And I found that their voices changed with your voice among them.
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And as a child, it was so interesting to hear speech,
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everyone talking differently, They were more vulnerable,
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they were more open with each other.
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And I got to see my mother kind of use the show
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as a way to open up for herself and to learn the language.
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She would not always understand what was happening,
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but she would have this little trick where she would,
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every time there was like an inflected moment in the show with your voice,
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my mother would work on a client and she would go, Oh boy.
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And then the client would, it always works.
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You could, any given time,
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you could just say, oh boy.
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And then the client would say, isn't that right?
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And then she would learn what was happening from them because her voice,
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her head is down.
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She couldn't hear it.
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But I saw this kind of town square that your voice created and the themes and what was really touching for me,
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and I didn't understand it at that time.
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For a community that I grew up in,
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working poor, immigrants, reading was very intimidating.
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We didn't step into bookstores or libraries.
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It felt like an impenetrable world that was not for us.
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And it was aligned with elitism and power and institutions and higher learning that we thought,
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well, that ship has sailed for us.
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But when you held up the books in your show,
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my mother recognized that and says, oh, this is accessible.
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making the act of reading both accessibly dignified,
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but also fruitful for people who are outside of these realms of institutional elitism.
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And I saw the women talk about books in your show,
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and then they would walk across the Barnes & Noble,
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across the mall, and they would have language.
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And they would come in and they would say,
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this is the book I want.
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I know how to talk about it.
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And there's a kind of dignified confidence to literacy.
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I don't know if anyone has talked about that,
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but I think that was the major byproduct
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that your show did is that it made working class people who don't have access to centers of knowledge.
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They don't get to be in a classroom and have high philosophy around craft or what have you.
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They get to participate in the vehicle of culture and you make culture legible to them who often don't have that chance.
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So I just want to say thank you so much for that.
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Oh my God.
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Now I'm going to cry.
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Well, I think your mother is with us in spirit today.
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She would be so proud that it is now your book that I'm holding up and telling the world about her son.
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And when you were, you know,
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working in the nail salon,
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you're working at the Boston Market,
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How did you get to be Ocean Vong, the celebrated writer?
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Well, my mother knew I was a nerd.
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And we came up in Vietnam as rice farmers.
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I was the first to go to college, the first to read.
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And we've been rice farmers very happily for hundreds of years.
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It was the war that ejected us from that idyllic world into this one.
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And so by geopolitical violence and accident,
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I'm now a professor in a way.
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But she knew that in this country,
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the sentence will be the medium that can make us change and change our lives.
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She didn't understand it, but she knew it was powerful.
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So she would drop me off before her shift at the nail salon,
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at the public library, and she gave me this mandate.
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She said, you go in there and you read everything,
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especially what you don't understand.
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Wow.
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And it's so interesting because that's what I give my students now.
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I said, you have to move towards the unknown, the mystery.
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The condition of not knowing is the first step of knowledge.
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Wow.
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Don't be afraid of not knowing.
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You owe it to yourself to go to the root of the mystery.
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And that is to work not only a pedagogy and education,
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but also of life.
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It goes beyond books.
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When I called you, I told you that when I told you I was choosing this as a book club,
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I said, I still think about High.
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I still think about Sony.
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I still think about these characters.
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Readers, didn't you love these characters?
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And don't they stay with you?
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And so I am just wondering how this story came to be.
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I'm always fascinated by the process by which authors come to tell their story.
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It feels like the emperor was always inside you somewhere.
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How did it come to be?
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Yeah, you know, America has often been founded on the idea of the nuclear family.
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And one antidote to that might be the found family.
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Yeah.
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But I actually think when we look at the history of our culture,
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it's the circumstantial family founded around labor.
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And so when I worked at Boston Market as a teenager,
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I found that it was actually the relationships that you had with people you don't choose.
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people who are cobbled together working through a shift,
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and you start to know their footsteps.
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You start to feel the cologne they wear,
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the gum, and when that gum will expire.
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You can hear how they cough, how they talk.
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And the intimacy that comes from the circumstantial labor cobbled together is actually the foundation of so much of our country.
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So much of it is founded on labor,
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loneliness, and love in the midst of all that.
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I think that's so powerful, don't you all?
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You have your chosen family.
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You have your family that you're born into.
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Many people have a chosen family that they found.
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But all of us who work,
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and certainly I remember during certainly all the years that I spent here in Chicago,
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25 years just down the street,
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that we were our own circumstantial family
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and were integrated in each other's lives in a way
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that you weren't integrated in the lives of all the people who were your biological family.
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And I have to say,
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you've created the most memorable,
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misfit, motley crew of characters.
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And I love that each one of them had their own level of kindness in their own unique way.
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And I think that that kind of group uh,
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happens all over the world.
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People create camaraderie with each other.

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Kontext & Hintergrund

In dem bewegenden Gespräch zwischen Ocean Vuong und Oprah Winfrey wird die tiefgreifende Wirkung von Sprache und Kommunikation auf verschiedene Gemeinschaften beleuchtet. Vuong beschreibt, wie die Stimme von Oprah nicht nur für ihn, sondern auch für seine Mutter und viele Frauen in einem Nagelstudio von großer Bedeutung war. Diese Frauen, oft Migrantinnen, fanden Trost und Identifikation in der Sprache, die sie hörten, und konnten so eine neue Verbindung zur englischen Sprache und zur Literatur aufbauen. Die Erfahrung, zuzuhören und mit anderen zu sprechen, half ihnen, ihre eigene Stimme zu finden und den Zugang zur Welt der Bücher und des Wissens zu erleichtern.

Top 5 Phrasen für die tägliche Kommunikation

  • „Oh, wow.“ - Ein Ausdruck des Staunens oder der Überraschung, der vielseitig eingesetzt werden kann.
  • „Ist das nicht richtig?“ - Diese Frage ist nützlich, um Zustimmung zu suchen und Diskussionen anzuregen.
  • „Was denkst du darüber?“ - Eine hervorragende Möglichkeit, um andere in Gespräche einzubeziehen und deren Meinungen zu erfahren.
  • „Ich habe das noch nie so betrachtet.“ - Eine gute Phrase, um Offenheit für neue Perspektiven zu zeigen.
  • „Kannst du das näher erläutern?“ - Diese Frage fördert ein tieferes Verständnis in Gesprächen.

Schritt-für-Schritt-Schattierungsanleitung

Um Ihre Englische Aussprache zu verbessern und den Dialog zwischen Ocean Vuong und Oprah Winfrey effektiv zu nutzen, folgen Sie diesen Schritten:

  1. Hören Sie aktiv zu: Sehen Sie sich das Video mehrmals an und achten Sie darauf, wie die Sprecher ihre Tonlage und Betonung verwenden. Konzentrieren Sie sich dabei besonders auf emotionale Momente.
  2. Still Nachsprechen: Nutzen Sie die Technik des shadowspeak: Sprechen Sie die Sätze nach, während Sie zuhören. Halten Sie das Video an, wenn nötig, um mit den Sprechern synchron zu bleiben.
  3. Wiederholen Sie individuelle Phrasen: Nehmen Sie sich Zeit, um die in der Liste oben genannten Phrasen zu wiederholen. Üben Sie sie in verschiedenen Kontexten, um ihre Flexibilität zu erlernen.
  4. Selbstbewertung: Nehmen Sie sich beim Nachsprechen auf. Hören Sie sich Ihre Aufnahmen an und vergleichen Sie Ihre Aussprache mit der von Vuong und Winfrey.
  5. Regelmäßige Übung: Setzen Sie sich regelmäßige Übungszeiten, um das Gelernte zu festigen. Versuchen Sie, auch eigene Gespräche mit den gelernten Phrasen zu führen.

Durch diesen praktischen Ansatz des shadowspeak, unter Verwendung von Beispielen aus realen Gesprächen, können Sie nicht nur Ihre Englische Aussprache verbessern, sondern auch Selbstbewusstsein in der Kommunikation entwickeln. Nutzen Sie die Geschichten und Lehren aus der Diskussion, um Ihre eigene Stimme in der Sprache zu finden.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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